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Trouble brewing in Florida's swamps: Henry Lamb explains why property owners are fighting mad
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Sunday, July 7, 2002 | Henry Lamb

Posted on 07/07/2002 12:42:50 AM PDT by JohnHuang2

"The Wildlands Project," published in Wild Earth in 1992, chose a map of Florida to illustrate its concept of core wilderness areas, connected by corridors of wilderness, all surrounded by "buffer zones," managed for "conservation objectives." What are conservation objectives? Reed Noss, author of "The Wildlands Project," says "... the collective needs of non-human species must take precedence over the needs and desires of humans."

The humans who live in South Florida are seeing the needs of non-human populations being given priority over the property rights and livelihoods of the people who live there. The entire Everglades is shown on the Wildlands map as a core wilderness area, surrounded by buffer zones that reach from Miami to Key West.

CERP – the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan – is the name used to describe 52 projects to transform South Florida into the Wildlands project's vision of how the state ought to be.

The initiative was launched by environmentalists who convinced the politicians that the Everglades has been destroyed, and must be restored to save biodiversity in the ecosystem.

Among the organizations that are promoting the restoration project are: the Nature Conservancy, which received more than $136 million in federal grants between 1997 and 2001; the Audubon Society, recipient of $10 million in federal grants during the same period; and the World Wildlife Fund, which has received more than $70 million in federal grants.

The Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society funded the writing of "The Wildlands Project," according to its author, Reed Noss.

Politicians, however, depend on votes and money from industry, as well as from environmental organizations, so the plan necessarily included input from the business community.

When the plan finally came together, it was supposed to achieve three equal priorities: expand water supplies for South Florida's exploding population; control water flows and prevent flooding; and provide sufficient water flows to restore the Everglades. This tenuous agreement was the basis on which President Clinton and Gov. Jeb Bush launched the $7.8 billion project on Dec. 11, 2000.

From day one, the project was in trouble. While the U.S. Corps of Engineers is the agency with overall responsibility, there are several other federal agencies, state agencies and county agencies involved – all with turf to protect and agendas to advance. Riding herd on all these agencies, is a network of environmental organizations, each with their own interests and agendas. Then comes the powerful industries that employ people and pay taxes. At the bottom of the list are the land owners – those who are most directly affected by the restoration plan.

At the moment, everyone is unhappy. The environmentalists are threatening to withdraw support if higher priority is not assigned to Everglades restoration. Scientists within the implementing agencies have no idea whether the plan will work. And the landowners are finally organizing to say "enough is enough."

According to an extensive report in the Washington Post, Stuart J. Appelbaum, the Army Corps of Engineers man in charge, says "We have no idea if this will work." The EPA's South Florida director says of the project, "It's falling apart before my eyes." And Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, Bob Gasaway, says "I don't see a shred of evidence that all this money will help the environment."

Shannon Estenoz, an engineer for the World Wildlife Fund, says he is getting angrier by the day and thinks his organization's folks may have been "suckers" for having supported the CERP.

All these problems with the CERP may be dwarfed by the trouble that is now brewing in the Florida swamp. The land owners are getting tired of seeing their property flooded, or condemned and taken, or devalued by the threat of future projects.

Homeowners associations, property-rights groups and legal-defense funds have sprung up all across South Florida. Edmund W. Antonowicz, secretary of the 15,000 Coalition, fired off a letter to President Bush, urging him to step in and prevent the massive land grabs that are going on. Madeleine Fortin's Legal Defense Foundation sued the Corps of Engineers, charging that the Corps lacked legislative authority to condemn land outside the original "footprint" authorized in 1989. A preliminary ruling finds in favor of the land owners.

These efforts have attracted the attention of the Paragon Foundation in Alamogordo, N.M., which sent Jay Walley, to meet with more than 40 representatives of area organizations in Homestead on June 29. The meeting produced a skeletal plan to create a broad coalition to guide a national effort to stop the erosion of private property rights in South Florida, and restore some semblance of sanity to the CERP.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: agenda21; cerp; enviralists; landgrab; reuters; sustainability; wildlandsproject
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Sunday, July 7, 2002

Quote of the Day by governsleastgovernsbest

1 posted on 07/07/2002 12:42:50 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Edmund W. Antonowicz, secretary of the 15,000 Coalition, fired off a letter to President Bush, urging him to step in and prevent the massive land grabs that are going on.

Oh yea, that'll happen. They're asking the guy who shut off water to patriotic American farmers under the guise of saving bottom feeding sucker fish to now save "the massive land grabs that are going on" in his brother's state?...after his brother went to bed with the devil (Clinton) for 7.8 billion American tax dollars.

This tenuous agreement was the basis on which President Clinton and Gov. Jeb Bush launched the $7.8 billion project on Dec. 11, 2000.

But hey, Republicans don't do land grabs and suck taxes for bogus environmental scams do they?

2 posted on 07/07/2002 12:58:12 AM PDT by lewislynn
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To: lewislynn
I do not like the land grabs. The Everglades is a river.
It needs to be protected. Why can't it be done without grabbing private lands, or are the private land those that belong to developers who want to put communities from coast to coast?
3 posted on 07/07/2002 1:35:03 AM PDT by wingnuts'nbolts
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To: snopercod
Jaw drop again?
4 posted on 07/07/2002 1:45:19 AM PDT by First_Salute
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To: wingnuts'nbolts
See: Sustaining Nothing, Losing Everything, Sierra Times, June 20, 2002, by Tom DeWeese (posted June 21, 2002 by brityank).
"What is Sustainable Development? ...

On June 29, 1993, former President Bill Clinton issued Executive Order #12852 to create the President's Council on Sustainable Development. Sustainable Development calls for changing the very infrastructure of the nation away from private ownership and control of property to nothing short of a national zoning system.

Locally elected officials will no longer be the single driving force in making decisions for their communities. Rules will be made behind the scenes in non-elected "sustainability councils" armed with truckloads of federal regulations, guidelines and money.

According to Sustainable Development policies, air conditioning, convenience foods, single-family housing and cars are among the products that have already been determined to be unsustainable. Under such a system, the federal government, backed by an army of private, non-governmental organizations.

(NGOs), like the Sierra Club, Planned Parenthood, and the National Education Association will influence, if not dictate, policy in state governments and in local communities...

...The Community Character Act (S.975), and its counterpart in the House of Representatives (H.R.1433), is the legislation that will legalize enforcement of Sustainable Development in every community in the nation. The bill requires local governments to implement land-management plans using guidelines outlined in a federal document called the "Smart Growth Legislative Guidebook." This publication was developed with $2 million provided by the Clinton Administration to "guide" counties, cities and towns on how to "update their local zoning."

The Community Character Act offers grants to communities that will pay up to 90% of the costs for localities to "update" their zoning, but only if they do it the way the federal government dictates. The Community Character Act requires localities to "conserve historic, scenic, natural and cultural resources." These are euphemisms that mean more land grabs and fewer places where people can freely go about their daily lives. It means planned economies, restricted housing, and diminished use of cars. It means government control of property. The bill contains not a single mention of private-property rights protection..."


5 posted on 07/07/2002 1:52:21 AM PDT by First_Salute
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To: backhoe
Bump.
6 posted on 07/07/2002 1:53:29 AM PDT by First_Salute
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To: First_Salute
Ree: Your #5.

Thank you for bringing this to my attention.

7 posted on 07/07/2002 2:54:10 AM PDT by Budge
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To: First_Salute
Here are the sites of two very tireless crusaders against this nonsense:

-Eco-Logic online--

-Joan Veon--

8 posted on 07/07/2002 3:05:05 AM PDT by backhoe
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To: Budge
Here's another one: www.propertyrightsresearch.org. Click on articles and then "national" and start reading. It's the best site I've found so far for getting the whole picture as to what is going on. BTW, the site used to be named "No Darby Refuge." These people are Amish farmers who've been fighting for five years now to hang on to their property.

Also, I subscribe to this: prc-digest-request@freedom.org. (Send email with the word "subscribe" in the subject line.) It's a daily report on enviros, property rights erosion, Smart Growth, the U.N., etc.
9 posted on 07/07/2002 4:02:12 AM PDT by jaq
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To: First_Salute; Carry_Okie
Not this time. Those "wildlands" idiots were up here where I live pushing their corridor crap at the latest city council meeting.

This project should be named "U-CERP".

10 posted on 07/07/2002 4:09:06 AM PDT by snopercod
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To: JohnHuang2; Grampa Dave; wingnuts'nbolts
I think Henry Lamb is giving a very lop-sided view of what is actually happening in SW FL, and in fact, is giving a lot of inaccurate info. Here is an article from the Washington Post which of course gives a different view, and I think somewhere in between these two extreme views (Lamb and the WP), one may be able to ascertain the truth:

Growing Pains in SW FL (Re: too much private development; not enough conservation)
11 posted on 07/07/2002 4:13:02 AM PDT by summer
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To: lewislynn; First_Salute; Budge; backhoe; jaq; snopercod

See my the article linked in my post #11.
12 posted on 07/07/2002 4:14:51 AM PDT by summer
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To: lewislynn; First_Salute; Budge; backhoe; jaq; snopercod

See the article linked in my post #11.
13 posted on 07/07/2002 4:15:03 AM PDT by summer
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To: summer
Further information is useful, and appreciated!
14 posted on 07/07/2002 4:19:37 AM PDT by backhoe
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To: backhoe
My pleasure. Like I said, somewhere in between these two extreme is where you can probably find the TRUTH.... :)
15 posted on 07/07/2002 4:46:23 AM PDT by summer
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To: backhoe
My pleasure. And, like I said, somewhere in between these two extremes is where you can probably find the TRUTH.... :)
16 posted on 07/07/2002 4:46:40 AM PDT by summer
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To: summer
With all due respect, the article to which you refer is full of the same blather these people are using all over the country, but especially in the west. "A major threat to the ecology ... the last refuge for endangered species ... unbridled sprawl ... chewing up 1,000 acres of wetlands ..."

We have more wetlands now than ever before, and we're creating more and more. (And btw, let's call a spade a spade, shall we? Wetlands are swamplands.) How do we accomplish this? By using The Wetlands Protection Act, The Endangered Species Act, The Clear Air and Water Act, etc. to force private property owners off their land. This has been a successful venture out west. As a result, the government now owns 40 percent of the land.

Here in Michigan, for instance, beach owners on Lake Huron can't do what they've been doing for years: groom their beaches to prevent them from becoming swamplands. Why? Well, because the Army Corps of Engineers says that the beaches are "emerging wetlands ... which are globally important ... to our biodiversity." How much is your house worth when it has swampland as a front yard? What happens when the government decides to protect this wetland? Well, along comes The Nature Conservacy, who'll buy the land and resell it to the government. If you don't want to sell, tough. You'd better be richer than Bill Gates and have a darn good attorney.

Conservation should be a local decision, not a federal government decision. Also, readers should note that once an area is "saved," the enviros push to have it declared a "Wilderness Area." This, in turn, invokes the Roadless Initiative, which then makes the area off limits to all. This is what happened out west with their forests. As they say, "Fire trucks can't fly ..." so they we unable to effectively fight the fires.

The point here is that all this concern for saving and protecting and restoring is nothing more than an attempt to circumvent private property rights. Henry Lamb knows this, and many of us out here do, too.
17 posted on 07/07/2002 5:11:28 AM PDT by jaq
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To: JohnHuang2
"Among the organizations that are promoting the restoration project are: the Nature Conservancy, which received more than $136 million in federal grants between 1997 and 2001; the Audubon Society, recipient of $10 million in federal grants during the same period; and the World Wildlife Fund, which has received more than $70 million in federal grants."

I think it's just grand that we use our tax dollars to support communist fronts. Why don't we just openly send $500 Billion to Cuba while we're at it?
18 posted on 07/07/2002 5:40:44 AM PDT by Nuke'm Glowing
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To: jaq
jaq, With all due respect to you in Michigan -- I know more about SW FL than you and Henry Lamb combined, and his articles are way off base. He should contact the person mentioned in the WP post who works with GW and Jeb, and he might learn a thing or two. Jeb is walking a tightrope in this state, balancing environmental concerns with the concerns of his close friends who are developers, and he (Gov. Bush) is doing an outstanding job at this. All the people on FR who are screaming hysterics about SW Fl are in fact quite clueless.
19 posted on 07/07/2002 5:54:08 AM PDT by summer
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To: summer
Look, you're missing my point. If overdevelopment is your concern, then you should work toward better zoning laws and elect local politicians who will support your ideas. I have a problem with using the federal government to prevent "urban sprawl" by protecting, preserving or restoring anything. Go to www.propertyrightsresearch.org and read about how this has affected property rights in other states.

Also, most people think urban sprawl is the excessive property development. In fact, smart growth sites describe sprawl as three or fewer houses to a mile of property. Their cure is to create exactly what you see happening in FL.
20 posted on 07/07/2002 6:44:00 AM PDT by jaq
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